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Family Law for Revere Residents
Information on family law matters for Revere, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. The first telephone conversation with Jim Glaser Law is offered without charge.
How does family law work for Revere residents?
Revere, Massachusetts family-law matters are heard in the Probate and Family Court for the county where the matter arises. The intake call with Jim Glaser Law captures the type of matter, current pleadings, court dates, and parenting situation. The firm either handles the matter or connects the client with a Revere, Massachusetts family-law partner attorney at no extra cost to the client. The family-law partner network handles divorce, stand-alone custody, paternity, child-support modification, guardianship, post-divorce contempt, and 209A abuse-prevention petitions. Family-law matters are billed on a fixed-fee or hourly basis depending on scope, addressed in the written fee agreement.
Family-law matters beyond divorce for Revere residents (custody-only, paternity, guardianship, post-divorce modifications) are filed in the Suffolk County Probate and Family Court. Revere family-law matters beyond divorce (custody, paternity, guardianship, post-divorce modifications) are filed in the Suffolk County Probate and Family Court. The intake call evaluates the matter and the firm either handles it directly or connects the client with a Massachusetts family-law partner attorney at no extra cost.
Which Revere courts hear this category?
For readers in Revere, the following Suffolk County courts hear this category of matter:
- Suffolk County Probate and Family Court 24 New Chardon Street, Boston, MA 02114 custody and family-law filings
Filing in the wrong forum is a procedural setback rather than a permanent bar, but it costs time. Counsel routes the matter to the correct court at intake.
How do I engage Jim Glaser Law from Revere?
The intake line at the number above takes Revere calls 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The first telephone consultation is free. On contingency matters, the firm collects no attorney fee unless and until there is a recovery to the client; the written fee agreement spells out all costs and expenses up front.
Revere sits in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, with a population of approximately 62,186 per the most recent Census estimate. Suffolk County matters of this category are heard and administered through the appropriate Suffolk County forums and are evaluated under the same Massachusetts framework that applies to every family law matter in the Commonwealth.
Revere sits on the coast just north of Boston and is one of the two cities in Suffolk County alongside Boston itself. The MBTA Blue Line at Wonderland, Revere Beach, and Beachmont serves the city. Civil matters originate at the Chelsea District Court for Revere filings and the Suffolk County Superior Court in Boston. The Massachusetts General / Brigham network and Cambridge Health Alliance facilities supply most Revere medical-records production. Beachmont, Point of Pines, Riverside, and the Beach corridor are the residential neighborhoods most often named in residential premises matters. Route 1A and Route 60 concentrate the auto-accident pattern; the Revere Beach State Reservation draws heavy summer foot traffic that compounds the premises-liability pattern. Revere was incorporated as a town in 1846 and as a city in 1914. The city covers roughly 6 square miles on the coast immediately north of Boston. Revere ZIP code is 02151, and the city is served by the MBTA Blue Line at Wonderland, Revere Beach, and Beachmont stations.
Revere 209A protective-order matters are heard in District, Probate and Family, Boston Municipal, or Superior Court depending on the relationship between the parties. The Chelsea District Court handles Revere filings up to the District threshold; matters above route to Suffolk Superior Court in Boston.
Brigham and Women's Hospital and Boston Medical Center are among the Suffolk County hospitals that serve Revere residents. Resolution framework varies by case type: separation agreement, custody plan, modification order, or contempt finding depending on the underlying matter. Revere family law referral matters of this category proceed in the Suffolk County Probate and Family Court at 24 New Chardon Street, Boston, MA 02114.
The Revere client's first call covers the relationship facts, the timeline, the financial baseline, and the desired outcome so the firm can map the path forward. Revere's scale makes it a meaningful Massachusetts case origin point with the local concentration that smaller-than-Boston cities provide.
What do Revere residents most often ask?
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Where are Revere family law cases heard?
Suffolk County Probate and Family Court (24 New Chardon Street, Boston, MA 02114) for custody and family-law filings.
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What is the filing deadline for family law matters originating in Revere?
The deadline is set by Massachusetts law (not by city), generally three years from the date of the incident under M.G.L. c. 260, sec. 2A for civil tort claims. Some matters carry shorter deadlines (workers comp notice, claims against a public entity). Telephone (617) JIM-WINS for the deadline that applies to your facts.
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Does Jim Glaser Law handle family law matters for Revere residents?
Yes. Jim Glaser Law represents Revere, Suffolk County residents on family law matters. The first telephone consultation is offered without charge. Call (617) JIM-WINS for a Massachusetts case review.
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How quickly should I call after a family law matter arises in Revere?
Sooner is better. Massachusetts deadlines run from the date of the incident, not from the date you decided to look for counsel. The intake line at (617) JIM-WINS is answered 24 hours a day so you can call when it is convenient.
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Does Jim Glaser Law handle Revere cases on contingency?
Most family law matters accepted by the firm are handled on contingency, which means no attorney fee is owed unless and until the matter resolves with a recovery to the client. Case-related costs and expenses are addressed in the written fee agreement signed at intake.
How family law cases proceed under Massachusetts law
Massachusetts family law matters are governed primarily by state statute and case law that applies uniformly across the Commonwealth. Revere, Suffolk County residents engaging counsel for a family law case proceed under the same procedural and substantive framework that governs every family law matter in Massachusetts. The practical differences between Revere and other Massachusetts cities are venue (which court hears the matter), local court personnel and tendencies, and the local insurance adjusters or counterparties who routinely handle the carrier or defense side. Massachusetts trial courts maintain a high degree of consistency in how they handle family law matters, but local counsel familiar with the Suffolk County bench and bar produces measurably better outcomes than counsel new to the venue.
The strength of a Revere family law matter typically rests on three things: documented harm or breach, available insurance or assets to pay a recovery, and the strength of the documentary record in the file. The first telephone consultation with Jim Glaser Law evaluates each of these for your specific facts and gives you a realistic assessment of how the matter is likely to proceed. Documentary evidence matters most in the early weeks of any case, before memories fade and physical evidence is altered or discarded. The firm advises Revere clients on what to preserve, what to document, and what statements to avoid making to opposing parties or their carriers.
Massachusetts has a robust appellate-court tradition that shapes how family law matters are evaluated at the trial-court level. The Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) is the Commonwealth's court of last resort, and the Appeals Court hears most intermediate appeals. Revere family law cases that present novel issues or significant disputed facts may be appealed; most do not, but the threat of appellate review shapes settlement negotiations. Jim Glaser Law has practiced before Massachusetts courts at every level since 1995 and considers appellate posture as part of every family law case evaluation.
Massachusetts statutes and case law
- M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. Three-year statute of limitations for most civil tort claims in Massachusetts; runs from the date of injury or, in some matters, from the date the injury was reasonably discoverable.
- M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 85. Modified comparative negligence rule (50% bar) applicable to most negligence-based claims; recovery reduced by claimant's percentage of fault and barred entirely above 50%.
- M.G.L. c. 93A. Massachusetts unfair and deceptive practices statute; double or triple damages plus attorney fees available in qualifying consumer and business-to-business cases when violations are willful or knowing.
- M.G.L. c. 258. Tort Claims Act; governs claims against state and municipal entities, including the two-year written-presentment requirement and the $100,000 per-claimant damages cap.
- M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 6B and 6C. Pre-judgment and post-judgment interest provisions; apply to most damage awards in Massachusetts civil cases at statutory rates.
- Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure. Procedural rules governing filed cases in Superior, District, and Land Courts; specialized procedural rules apply in Probate and Family Court and the BLS.
Common family law case patterns in Revere
- Family Law (Referral) matter arising in Revere: first analysis is venue and applicable Massachusetts statute.
- Family Law (Referral) matter where another party's insurance is in scope: pre-suit demand under applicable Massachusetts framework.
- Family Law (Referral) matter that crosses Massachusetts and another state: choice-of-law analysis where Revere jurisdiction may not apply.
- Family Law (Referral) matter involving a Massachusetts state or municipal entity: Tort Claims Act notice and damages-cap analysis.
- Family Law (Referral) matter referred to specialized counsel where appropriate: Jim Glaser Law refers without fee to partner attorneys when a matter falls outside the firm's primary practice areas.
Typical timeline for a Revere family law matter
Initial intake and case evaluation occur during the first telephone consultation, which is offered without charge. The firm opens a file, captures documentary evidence, and identifies the controlling Massachusetts statutes and case law for your specific {label.toLowerCase()} facts.
Pre-suit work runs from intake through demand or settlement, typically three to twelve months depending on the matter's complexity. Suffolk County procedures and local counterparts shape pacing within the broader Massachusetts framework.
Where pre-suit resolution is not available, litigation in the appropriate Suffolk County or Massachusetts state forum follows standard procedure under the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure or applicable specialized procedural rules. The decision to file suit is made jointly by the firm and the client based on the available pre-suit resolution.
What can be recovered in a family law case
- Documented past damages caused by the conduct or breach in question (medical bills, repair costs, lost income, out-of-pocket expenses).
- Future damages where reasonably foreseeable and provable under Massachusetts law (anticipated medical care, lost earning capacity, ongoing repair or remediation costs).
- General damages for pain, suffering, emotional distress, or loss of enjoyment where the matter is a personal-injury or wrongful-death case under Massachusetts law.
- Statutory damages, multipliers, or attorney fees where the applicable Massachusetts statute provides them (Chapter 93A, wage-and-hour statutes, civil-rights statutes).
- Equitable relief (injunction, specific performance, declaratory relief) where money damages are inadequate or where Massachusetts law specifically authorizes equitable relief.
- Pre-judgment and post-judgment interest under M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 6B and 6C, applied to the principal recovery from the date specified by statute.
- Costs and fees recoverable under the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure or by statute, where applicable.
More questions Revere residents ask about family law
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What is the deadline to file a family law claim in Massachusetts?
Most Massachusetts civil claims must be filed within three years of the cause of action under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. Some matters carry shorter deadlines (claims against state or municipal entities, certain contract claims, certain consumer-protection claims). The first telephone consultation with Jim Glaser Law identifies the deadline that applies to your specific Revere facts.
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Does Jim Glaser Law handle {label} cases for Revere residents on contingency?
Most family law matters accepted by the firm are handled on contingency, which means no attorney fee is owed unless and until the matter resolves with a recovery to the client. Case-related costs and expenses are addressed in the written fee agreement at intake. Family Law (Referral) matters that fall outside the firm's primary practice areas may be referred to a Massachusetts partner attorney without fee to the reader.
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Where will my Revere family law case be heard?
Family Law (Referral) matters are heard in the appropriate Suffolk County or Massachusetts state forum based on the case type, amount in controversy, and applicable jurisdictional rules. The first telephone consultation identifies the appropriate forum for your specific facts and confirms whether the firm handles your matter directly or refers to partner counsel.
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What information should I have ready for my first Revere consultation?
Basic facts about what happened, when, where, and who else was involved. Any related documents (correspondence, contracts, incident reports, medical records, photos, financial records relevant to damages). Names and contact information for any witnesses. Policy or coverage information for any insurance that may be in scope. Do not worry about being incomplete; the intake conversation is a starting point.
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Will my Revere family law matter end up in court?
Most matters do not. The majority of family law cases resolve through pre-suit negotiation. Litigation is reserved for matters where a fair pre-suit resolution is not available. The decision to file suit is made jointly by the firm and the client based on the specific facts and the available pre-suit resolution.
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What if my Revere family law matter involves multiple parties or multiple insurance policies?
Multi-party and multi-policy family law matters are common in Massachusetts. The first telephone consultation identifies every party who may be liable, every insurance policy that may be in scope, and any procedural rules that apply when multiple parties are joined. Suffolk County procedure permits joining multiple defendants in a single action, and the firm's evaluation considers each party's contribution and each carrier's coverage.
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Are there any costs to me even if Jim Glaser Law accepts my Revere family law matter on contingency?
Case-related costs and expenses are addressed in the written fee agreement signed at intake. Common costs in Massachusetts family law matters include medical-record requests, expert opinion fees, court filing fees, deposition costs, and copies. The firm typically advances these costs and is reimbursed from any recovery; if there is no recovery, the fee agreement specifies whether costs remain the client's responsibility. Specifics are reviewed during the first telephone consultation and in the written fee agreement.
This sub-entry constitutes legal information, not legal advice. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Attorney advertising under Mass. R. Prof. C. 7.1 to 7.5. Responsible attorney: Jim Glaser, Massachusetts.